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     Bringing a giraffe into the world is a tall order£®A baby giraffe falls 10 feet from its mother's
womb (×Ó¹¬) and usually lands on its    1_£®Within seconds it rolls over and tucks(Ëõ£) its legs
under its body£®Gary Richmond describes how a newborn giraffe learns it first   2   in his book,
A View from the Zoo£®
     The mother giraffe   3   her head long enough to take a quick look£®Then she   _4   herself
directly over her calf£®She waits for about a minute, and then she does the most   5   thing£®She
swings her long leg outward and kicks her baby£®
     If the baby giraffe doesn't   6   , the violent process is repeated over and over again£®The   _7  
to rise is very important£®As the baby calf grows   8   , the mother kicks it again to stimulate(¼¤Àø)
its efforts£®Finally, the calf stands for the first time on its   9   legs£®
     Then mother giraffe does the most remarkable thing£®She kicks it off its feet again£®  10   ?
She wants it to remember how it got up£®In the wild, baby giraffes must be able to get up as    11  
as possible to stay with the herd(¹Ⱥ), where there is   12   £®Wild animals and hunting dogs all   13 
young giraffes, and calves would be punished if the mother didn't   14   her calf to be watchful and
get up quickly£®
     Irving Stone   15   this£®He spent a lifetime studying   16   , writing novelized biographies of
such men as Michelangelo, Vincent van Gogh, and Charles Darwin£®
     Stone was once asked if he had found a   17   that runs through the lives of all these exceptional
people£®He said, "They are   18  over the head, knocked down, and for years they still get   19  £®
But every time they are knocked down, they stand up£®You cannot   20   these people.And at the
end of their lives they've accomplished some modest part of what they set out to do£®

(     )1£®A£®back      
(     )2£®A£®look      
(     )3£®A£®raises    
(     )4£®A£®throws    
(     )5£®A£®difficult
(     )6£®A£®get up    
(     )7£®A£®demand    
(     )8£®A£®excited  
(     )9£®A£®strong    
(     )10£®A£®Why      
(     )11£®A£®slowly  
(     )12£®A£®danger  
(     )13£®A£®hate    
(     )14£®A£®teach    
(     )15£®A£®accepted
(     )16£®A£®kindness
(     )17£®A£®history  
(     )18£®A£®injured  
(     )19£®A£®nowhere  
(     )20£®A£®change  
B£®side      
B£®move      
B£®lowers    
B£®finds    
B£®greedy    
B£®work on  
B£®struggle  
B£®worried  
B£®dusty    
B£®When      
B£®quickly  
B£®love      
B£®punish    
B£®urge      
B£®remembered
B£®greatness
B£®record    
B£®beaten
B£®anywhere  
B£®support  
C£®front      
C£®lesson    
C£®pulls      
C£®points    
C£®unreasonable
C£®lie down  
C£®request    
C£®surprised  
C£®weak      
C£®Where      
C£®carefully  
C£®silence    
C£®enjoy      
C£®remind    
C£®declared  
C£®nature    
C£®thread    
C£®killed
C£®everywhere
C£®blame      
D£®head        
D£®class        
D£®draws        
D£®positions    
D£®uncreative  
D£®come up      
D£®failure      
D£®tired        
D£®short        
D£®Which        
D£®frequently  
D£®safety      
D£®watch        
D£®allow        
D£®understood.  
D£®expectation  
D£®means        
D£®hurt.        
D£®somewhere    
D£®destroy      
1-5ACBDC       6-10ABDCA       11-15BDCAD         16-20BCBAD
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Jenkins was a jeweller, who had made a large diamond ring worth ¡ê57,000 for the Silkstone Jewellery Shop. When it was ready, he made a copy of it which looked ___16__ like the first one but was worth only¡ê2,000. This he took to the shop, which accepted it without a question.
¡¡¡¡Jenkins gave the much more 17__ ring to his wife for her fortieth birthday. Then, the husband and wife __18__ to Paris for a weekend. As to the __19__ ring, the shop sold it for¡ê60,000.
¡¡¡¡Six months later the buyer __20__it back to Silkstone's office. "It's a faulty diamond,"he said. "It isn't worth the high __21__ I paid." Then he told them the __22__. His wife's car had caught fire in an __23__. She had escaped  ,__24__ the ring had fallen off and been damaged  in the great __25__ of the fire.
¡¡¡¡The shop had to agree. They knew that no fire on earth can ever damage a perfect diamond. Someone had taken the __26__ diamond and put a faulty one in its place. The question was: who __27__ it?
¡¡¡¡A picture of the ring appeared in the __28__. A reader thought he recognized the ring. The next day, another picture appeared in the papers which showed a famous dancer walking out to a plane for Paris. Behind the dancer there was a woman __29__ a large diamond ring."Do You know the __30__ with the lovely diamond ring?" the papers asked their readers. Several months later, Jenkins was sentenced to seven years in prison.
16. A. surely         B. only¡¡¡¡¡¡C. nearly¡¡¡¡ D. exactly
17. A. real¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡ B. worthy¡¡¡¡C. modern      D. valuable
18.A. drove¡¡¡¡¡¡  B. flew        C. sailed¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡D. bicycled
19. A. last          B. first ¡¡¡¡¡¡  C. second¡¡¡¡¡¡D. next
20. A. sold¡¡¡¡¡¡ B. posted¡¡¡¡¡¡ C. brought¡¡¡¡  D. returned
21.A. money¡¡¡¡¡¡B. price¡¡¡¡     C. cost¡¡¡¡   D. value
22. A. facts¡¡¡¡¡¡ B. questions¡¡    C. results       D. matters
23. A. accident      B. affair¡¡¡¡   C. incident¡¡¡¡  D. experience
24. A. so¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡ B. but¡¡¡¡        C. or¡¡¡¡    D. and
25. A. pile¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡ B. heat¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡C. pressure     D. power
26. A. real¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡B. pure¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡C. right¡¡¡¡   D. exact¡¡
27.A. made¡¡¡¡¡¡B. stole¡¡¡¡       C. copied¡¡¡¡ D. did
28.A. magazines   B. notices¡¡    C. newspapers¡¡¡¡ D. programmes
29. A. carrying¡¡¡¡B. holding      C. dressing  ¡¡D. wearing¡¡¡¡¡¡ 
30. A. dancer¡¡¡¡¡¡B. woman¡¡¡¡¡¡C. jeweler       D. reader

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The sun was shining when I got on No.151 Bus. We passengers sat jammed together in heavy clothes. No one spoke. That¡¯s one of the   36       rules.  37      we see the same faces every day, we prefer to 38      behind our newspapers. People who sit so close together are using those thin sheets of newsprint to keep their  39   .
As the bus came near the Mile, a  40     suddenly rang out ¡° 41   ! This is your driver speaking.¡± We looked at the back of the driver¡¯s head. ¡°Put your papers down. All of you.¡± The  42     came down. ¡°Now, turn and face the person next to you. Go  43     .¡±
Surprisingly we all did it. Still no one smiled. I faced an older woman, her head wrapped in a red scarf(Χ½í).I saw her  44     every day. Our eyes met ¡£We waited for the next  45    from the driver. ¡°Now repeat after me. Good morning neighbor!¡±
Our voice were  46    .For many of us, these were the  47      words we had spoken that day. But we said them together, like  48    , to the strangers beside us. We couldn¡¯t help 49     .There was the feeling of relief, that we were not being held up£¨ÇÀ½Ù£©. But more, there was the sense of ice being  50     . ¡°Good morning, neighbor.¡± It was not so   51      after all. Some of us repeated it, others shook hands, many laughed. The bus driver said nothing more. He didn¡¯t   52     to. Not a single newspaper went back up. I heard laughter, a warm sound I had never heard before in  53     .
When I reached my stop, I said   54       to my seatmate, and then jumped off the bus. That day was  55       off better than most.
36. A. unwritten            B.  strict              C.  bus                 D. city
37. A. As                   B.  Because          C.  When             D. Although
38. A. read             B.  sit               C.  talk               D. hide
39. A. ways             B. methods          C.  respect                 D. distance
40. A. message        B. warning           C.  suggestion           D. voice
41. A. Attention            B. Minding     C.  Help             D. Listen
42. A. papers          B. passengers        C.  driver           D. tears
43. A. on                 B. round                C.   ahead          D. down
44. A. still               B.  nearly         C.  even              D. hardly
45. A. turn               B.  talk           C.  order            D. remark
46. A. loud              B.  neat                C.  slow                   D. weak
47. A. first               B.  last             C.  best                    D. only
48. A. passengers          B.  citizens           C.  patients               D. schoolchildren
49. A. shouting        B.  crying               C.  smiling           D. wondering
50. A. formed          B.  heated            C.  broken                 D. frozen
51. A. sad                B.  hard               C.  ordinary       D. shy
52. A. need              B.  want             C.  like              D. begin
53. A. my life          B.  Bus 151         C.  public             D. other words
54. A. good morning B.  good-bye    C.  hello             D. thanks
55. A. starting       B.  seeing         C.  taking           D. turning

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I left my friend¡¯s house nearly after seven. It was still too early for me to have my evening meal,  _21_  I walked along the sea front for about an hour  _22__  I began to feel hungry. By that time I was not far from a favorite restaurant of mine,  _23__  I often went to eat. I went into the restaurant and  _24_  my meal. While I was waiting for the soup  _25_  I looked around to see if I knew anyone in the restaurant. It was then  _26_  I noticed that a man seated at a corner table kept glancing  _27_  my direction, as if he knew me. The man had a newspaper in front of him, which he was  _28_  to read. When the waiter  _29_  my soup, the man was clearly puzzled by the  _30__  way in which the waiter and I addressed (³Æºô) each other. He became more  _31_  as time went on and it was  _32_  that I was well known in the restaurant. Eventually, he stood up and went into the  _33__ . After a few minutes he came out again,  _34_  the bill and left. Then I called the owner of the restaurant and asked him  _35_  the man had wanted. At first the owner did not want to tell me, but I  _36__ . ¡°Well,¡± he said. ¡°That man was from the police.¡± ¡°Really?¡± I said, considerably surprised. ¡°He was very  _37_  you.¡± ¡°But why?¡± I asked. ¡°He  _38_  you here because he thought you were the man he was  _39__ ,¡± the owner said. ¡°When he came into the kitchen, he showed me a photograph of the  _40__ . Of course, it was you.¡±
21. A. and            B. but                 C. so                   D. yet
22. A. until             B. when                C. because               D. after
23. A. where            B. what                C. which             D. that
24. A. sent              B. ordered              C. carried            D. got
25. A. making         B. to arrive           C. carrying          D. prepared
26. A. that             B. when             C. who                D. which
27. A. back             B. in                  C. off               D. at
28. A. trying           B. pretending               C. holding            D. going
29. A. brought          B. fetched               C. sent               D. took
30. A. familiar             B. strange               C. interesting          D. easy
31. A. puzzled          B. interested          C. funny             D. impatient
32. A. obvious          B. known               C. difficult            D. impossible
33. A. office            B. restaurant        C. kitchen           D. WC
34. A. gave             B. sent                 C. paid                    D. ordered
35. A. how             B. that                 C. which             D. what
36. A. thought          B. said                 C. explained          D. insisted
37. A. excited at     B. worried about       C. satisfied with        D. interested in
38. A. searched          B. followed            C. persuaded         D. advised
39. A. finding          B. looking for        C. talking to           D. listening to
40. A. wanted man      B. owner               C. policeman         D. waiter

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During college, I took a history class to fulfill a requirement.
The professor was a   32   fellow with red hair. He would walk   33   into the room wearing his winter coat, once not even   34   the hat during the lecture. He could not feel free in class and controlled the   35  just by looking through his glasses at his students.
So I  36   a little game for myself. I would try to find something in his lecture to ask him an intelligent question about,­­­   37   me to pay attention. He was obviously pleased to have a question to answer. In fact, his answers were always   38   .
I continued to do this every day and found myself actually enjoying the material. The professor seemed to become more   39   and some of the other students even   40  from time to time. My little game had saved me from being bored, as it was designed to do. And, I learned quite a bit about ancient world history. In spite of his strange   41  , he was indeed quite an expert in his field.
On the last day of the class we gathered our   42   and headed for the door. The shy, red-haired professor stepped directly in front of me,   43   I reached the door, and put his hand out. He said, ¡°I want to thank you for making my classes so interesting,¡± as he shook my hand warmly and   44   for the first time. I was so   45  . To me, it had been a pleasant way to pass the time. I had no idea that all of my questions asked in class had any effect on him or the others at all.
Each of us, through the things we say and do, and the kindness we can freely   46,   can have a great effect not just on our own experiences, but on those of others.

32.
A. strange 
B. patient  
C. popular 
D. proud 
33.
A. happily
B. hurriedly 
C. calmly 
D. shyly
34.
A. cleaning
B. noticing
C. removing 
D. wearing
35.
A. lecture 
B. voice 
C. difficulty
D. speed
36.
A. played 
B. continued
C. created 
D. bought 
37.
A. reminding
B. forcing
C. allowing 
D telling 
38.
A. special  
B. honest 
C. important 
D. interesting 
39.
A. relaxed
B. traditional
C. reasonable
D. concerned
40.
A. gave up  
B. fell behind 
C. look back 
D. joined in
41.
A. explanation
B. appearance
C. secret 
D. hobby
42.
A. collection
B. friends
C. game
D. books
43.
A. though  
B. unless
C. when
D. because
44.
A. regretted
B. smiled
C. cried
D. required
45.
A. worried
B. surprised
C. bored 
D. satisfied
46.
A. offer 
B. expect 
C. change 
D. reach 

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When I was ten, my family moved to a housing project in East Los Angeles. Even though we struggled to make  36  meet, my parents stressed to me .  37  fortunate we were to live in a great country with  38  opportunities. They imbued(¹àÊä) in me the  39  of family, faith and love for our country.
The following year, my dad, Benjamin, injured his back working in a cardboard-box factory and was  40  as a hairstylist. He rented space in a shopping mall and gave his shop the fancy name of Mr Ben's Coiffure.
The owner of the shopping center gave Dad a discount on his  41  for cleaning the parking lot three nights a week, which  42  getting up at 3 a.m. To pick up trash, Dad used a little machine that looked like a lawn mower  43  Morn and I emptied garbage cans and picked up litter  44  .
I did this job for two years, but the lessons I learned have  45  a lifetime. I acquired discipline, a strong work ethic and a  46  attitude towards life, I also learned at an early age the importance of  47  life's competing interests---in my  48  , school, homework and a job. All  49  helped during my senior year of high school, when I worked 40 hours a week at a fast-food restaurant while  50  precollege courses.
The hard work paid off. I attended the U.S. Military Academy and went on to receive graduate 51  in law and business from Harvard,  52  I joined a big Los Angeles law firm. In these jobs and in everything else I've done, I have never forgotten those days in the parking lot. The experience has  53 me that there is dignity in all work and that if people are working to  54  themselves and their families that is something we should  55  .
36. A. ends        B. demands     C. challenges  D. friends
37. A. so         B. what      C. why       D. how
38. A. priceless      B. resistless     C. limitless     D. sightless
39. A. efforts     B. decisions    C. concepts     D. activities
40. A. retired     B. resigned  C. replaced     D. retrained
41. A. sales        B. rent      C. machine    D. shop
42. A. meant      B. kept       C. needed    D. started
43. A. since       B. although     C. when     D. while
44. A. with joy    B. on purpose C. by hand   D. in time
45. A. proved     B. impressed   C. marked    D. lasted
46. A. practical      B. pleasant      C. positive      D. tolerant
47. A. developing   B. balancing   C. comparing  D. facing
48. A. case       B. example     C. dream     D. attempt
49. A. generally   B. lately      C. really          D. typically
50. A. applying      B. doing     C. following   D. taking
51. A. titles        B. instructions C. chances      D. degrees
52. A. after that      B. ever since  C. after which       D. after then
53. A. equipped      B. prepared   C. taught          D. guided
54. A. serve for      B. feed on    C. provide for       D. count on
55. A. believe    B. honor    C. remember  D. support

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